TV Schedule

Monday, Dec 11

After months of renovating their Hawaii home, the end is in sight for the Wolensky family. But their final task may be their biggest challenge, when they attempt to turn their garbage dump of a yard into an island oasis.

Domenica and Arthur just bought a new home for their huge, blended family. With teenagers sleeping in the living room, and no space for Domenica and Arthur to decompress, fences may make great neighbours, but walls make even better family members!

Jeremy and Tabitha want their cluttered family room to reflect their love of the West Coast and be neat and orderly. Paul turns their cramped room into a well-organized space with sliding screens, tons of storage and a cool Pacific flair.

David and Laura's home life revolves around cooking and entertaining in their kitchen. But with no counter space or room for their worldly wine collection, they must renovate their kitchen so they can host dinner parties in style. Paul completely guts the kitchen and changes the layout, giving them a central stove and a backlight stone onyx backsplash.

Jason and Bernice buy a 1910 house at auction for $16,000 and begin work on their biggest restoration yet. Starting with the kitchen and dining room, they tear down walls to create a modern, open space and install more windows to help brighten up the space. To honor the home's original design, they add back in reclaimed wainscoting and bench seating as well as repurpose an old dresser as a new kitchen island.

Jason and Bernice continue work on their 1910 Buffalo, NY home by finishing off the first floor. As they renovate the living room, they run into massive issues as they open up the damaged ceiling, and they face design challenges as they add a hidden powder room in the entryway to the house. They add unique historic details to each space, including leaded glass windows, columns, wainscoting and a gingerbread transom between the living and dining room.

Jason and Bernice are midway through renovations on their 1910 house in Buffalo, NY, and they have big plans to move the master bedroom from the front of the house to its original home in back. They remove the wall between two small bedrooms to create an amazing master suite space, but not without challenges. After discovering rot in an exterior wall, they have to completely rebuild and add a new header. In the end the space is bold and bright with tons of color and historic details, giving a nod to both the era of the home and Buffalo's eclectic design style.

Jason and Bernice are ready to complete work on the second floor of their 1910 house in Buffalo, NY. They team up with their siblings to take the large bedroom in the front of the house and convert it into two unique bedrooms. They also work to restore the home's original bathroom, and have trouble along the way as they find standing water in the bathroom floor, and face cracking walls as they add insulation to the historic home.

Jason and Bernice are moving up and out on their 1910 home in Buffalo, NY, as they transform the unfinished attic into an eclectic living space, and make a bold, colorful update to the exterior. They draw inspiration from the artistic community in Buffalo to create unique installations in the attic, including a storage wall made from old crates. They also mimic the colorful homes of Buffalo as they paint the exterior a contrasting teal and orange, and add a lush garden out front.

Jason and Bernice are nearly done with work on the 1910 Buffalo, NY house, and are almost ready to put it on the market! They finish off the renovation by revamping the tired backyard, adding a pergola-covered dining area, a back deck and creating a unique fence out of salvaged doors. Once work is complete, they have an open house and reveal the finished home to prospective buyers.

Jeff Devlin restores a kitchen and living room in a 1760 farmhouse turned guesthouse. He makes friends with a few farm animals along the way as he searches the property for a beam to use for the mantel.

Jeff Devlin turns the 1800s addition of a 1760 Colonial home into two unique spaces for entertaining. He turns one area into a classic parlor with a mahogany-topped bar and creates a billiards room with a custom light fixture in the other.

Jeff Devlin is recruited to repair the crumbling plaster walls and sagging second floor of a 1740s home. Jeff and his team add reclaimed beams to reinforce the second floor, restore a bedroom and create a new dining and foyer space.

Jeff Devlin works on an awkward master bedroom and bath that were part of a 1740s barn's conversion to a home in the 1940s. He and his team peel back the layers to expose some of the original structure and bring in reclaimed materials to create a rustic, yet elegant, master suite.

Jeff Devlin takes on a kitchen and living area in a rundown 1717 farmhouse. His team brings light to the front room by exposing a hidden transom window, and Jeff scavenges an old barn for reclaimed items to create a farmhouse feel in the kitchen.

A couple recruits Jeff Devlin and his team to turn their crumbling 1710 root cellar into a welcoming wine cellar. Jeff rebuilds a wall in the cellar with original stone, and he commissions a mural to bring historic style to the living room.

Jeff Devlin is called in to renovate a kitchen converted from the side porch of a 1817 stone house. He and his team reconfigure the space to create a more cohesive kitchen area, a new butler's pantry and a Colonial-style pantry.

Jeff Devlin is recruited by friends to renovate the 1980s kitchen addition on their 1859 farmhouse. Jeff and his team enhance the room's character with open shelving, a Victorian-style mudroom and built-in seating.

Jeff Devlin takes on a dilapidated 1717 spring house that the homeowners want to turn into a guesthouse with a writing space. He and his team restore the original stone, sandblast paint off the rafters and convert the attic into a loft.

Jeff Devlin turns back time on an awful 1980s-era kitchen and living room addition to a home built in 1729. He brings in reclaimed barn beams, adds a unique blend of rustic cabinetry and makes a coffee table out of a surprised piece he finds on the property.

Jeff Devlin heads to Aston, PA, to restore the basement of one of the oldest houses in the area. The owners want to use the space for entertaining, so Jeff creates two bar areas, a sitting area and a functional mudroom and entryway.

After inheriting a 1700s stone home that's been in the family since 1906, a couple calls on Jeff Devlin to peel away the dated decor in the entryway and living room to uncover as much of the original history as possible.

A mother and daughter bring Jeff Devlin in to restore two rooms in the original portion of their 1751 stone home. Jeff and his team dive right in, giving the dining room a slightly formal farmhouse feel. The team then achieves a rustic and refined style in the bathroom that blows the owners away.

Builder Chase Morrill and his team take on a dated and dysfunctional cabin in Belgrade Lakes, one of Maine's most desirable regions. With a budget of $40,000 and six weeks to finish the project, the team works to turn this Long Pond cabin into the perfect family retreat.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders renovate an off-the-grid camp for a family of city slickers. With limited resources, they incorporate the comforts of city living into the camp along with creating more privacy in the sleeping quarters, but a rotted water tank that might violate Maine law threatens to shut them down before the renovation is finished.

Builder Chase Morrill and his crew take on a historic clammers' shack that's one nor'easter away from falling into Bunganuc Creek. Designer Ashley joins the guys for a renovation that consists of opening up boarded windows as well as clearing out animal droppings, years of trash and old machinery. In order to make a big transformation without changing the look of the outside, they get creative while battling the rising tide that touches the camp. The team has their work cut out for them with this rebuild, and they know everyone in town is watching closely as they work on this historic landmark.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders take on an unusual project from retired United States Army Staff Sergeant Travis Mills. Through his foundation, Travis is building a retreat in Maine to help combat-injured veterans and their families adjust to their new normal. Chase and the crew are tasked with turning a simple lakeside cottage into an ADA-compliant event center for the veterans and their families. The key feature will be a huge commercial-grade deck that can accommodate up to 40 guests at a time. With only eight weeks until the first guests arrive and the camp buried under two feet of snow, the team will have to get creative to finish this project on time.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders take on a cabin in Industry, ME, that hasn't been touched since the 1970s. They discover that 40 years of Maine winters have not been kind to this place, and issues arise once the snow melts and they start digging into the project. Between the snow delays and their $45,000 budget, this project is sure to come down to the wire.

Builder Chase Morrill and his crew take on a historic clammers' shack that's one nor'easter away from falling into Bunganuc Creek. Designer Ashley joins the guys for a renovation that consists of opening up boarded windows as well as clearing out animal droppings, years of trash and old machinery. In order to make a big transformation without changing the look of the outside, they get creative while battling the rising tide that touches the camp. The team has their work cut out for them with this rebuild, and they know everyone in town is watching closely as they work on this historic landmark.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders take on an unusual project from retired United States Army Staff Sergeant Travis Mills. Through his foundation, Travis is building a retreat in Maine to help combat-injured veterans and their families adjust to their new normal. Chase and the crew are tasked with turning a simple lakeside cottage into an ADA-compliant event center for the veterans and their families. The key feature will be a huge commercial-grade deck that can accommodate up to 40 guests at a time. With only eight weeks until the first guests arrive and the camp buried under two feet of snow, the team will have to get creative to finish this project on time.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders take on a cabin in Industry, ME, that hasn't been touched since the 1970s. They discover that 40 years of Maine winters have not been kind to this place, and issues arise once the snow melts and they start digging into the project. Between the snow delays and their $45,000 budget, this project is sure to come down to the wire.

Chase Morrill and his team of builders renovate an off-the-grid camp for a family of city slickers. With limited resources, they incorporate the comforts of city living into the camp along with creating more privacy in the sleeping quarters, but a rotted water tank that might violate Maine law threatens to shut them down before the renovation is finished.

How hard can it be to renovate a bathroom? The Wolensky family is about to find out when they take on their upstairs bathroom. Demolition comes quickly, but when hidden problems are exposed, Alan and the family may have bitten off more than they can chew.